Purity Paper Wins Prestigious Prize

Death, disease and discharge of bodily fluids. What do these have in common? Not only can they be described as “gross” or “creepy,” they can render a person ritually impure according to Biblical law. They are also the subject of a paper by Yitzhaq Feder of Haifa University that won the 2012 David Noel Freedman Award for Excellence and Creativity in Hebrew Bible Scholarship. Feder’s paper, “Between Contagion and Cognition: Bodily Experience and the Conceptualization of Pollution in the Hebrew Bible,” examines the psychological and historical foundations of conceptions of impurity in ancient Israel and its relation to ancient notions of disease.

Feder is a 2011–2012 fellow at the W.F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research in Jerusalem and recipient of the Biblical Archaeology Society’s 2011 Joseph Aviram Fellowship, which brings Israeli scholars to the U.S. to attend professional conferences. His book, Blood Expiation in Hittite and Biblical Ritual: Origins, Context and Meaning, was recently published by the Society of Biblical Literature (SBL).

The David Noel Freedman Award is given by the SBL to a member who has received a Ph.D. in Biblical studies or a related field within the past ten years and submits an unpublished paper on Hebrew Bible scholarship. This year’s award committee included Susan Ackerman of Dartmouth College, Richard Friedman of the University of Georgia and David Howard of Bethel Seminary. The $1,000 prize is funded by donations from SBL membership and the family of the late David Noel Freedman, a prominent Biblical scholar, archaeologist, author and editor.

Media

In this lecture presented at The Explorers Club in New York, Sarah Yeomans examines a recently excavated, as-yet unpublished archaeological site that has substantially contributed to our understanding of what ancient Romans did to combat disease and injury.

Exhibits/Events

The Museum of Biblical Art in New York city turns ten this year. In honor of their tenth anniversary, they have organized a stunning exhibit: Sculpture in the Age of Donatello: Renaissance Masterpieces from Florence Cathedral.